Enclosure Damping Alternatives?

I'm curious about recommended alternatives to wool felt damping for a center channel.
Locally, there is a suppier of 1/2" thick F-13 wool felt, but the minimum order is for several yards at $150/yard, so I'm researching alternatives. Here's what I've located, but I'm not sure how the various materials compare and which would satisfy the needs of the enclosure:
Very interested in your input. Thank you!
 
Used to use Orca Black Hole on the interior enclosure surfaces, now use GR Research No-Rez. The acoustic absorption of the foam (that your felt would be doing) with the added benefit of the mass loading and lossy membrane attached to the enclosure walls.

Have always used Acousta-Stuff for the interior fill, as needed. And yes, if you get some Acousta-Stuff under a microscope, it does have a lot more crimps on the fibres. This will facilitate more tiny movements of the fibres, absorbing energy (turning into heat), and reducing the speed of the acoustic wavefront. It does work better than generic poly-fill.

Dan
 
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Since GM hasn't mentioned it yet 😉 -1in OC-703 rigid fibreglass board, or any equivalent brand rigid fibreglass board at the same thickness & 3lbs ft^3 density rating is getting on for 'as good as it gets' for most sealed, vented damping requirements, assuming the enclosure is well proportioned with optimised driver, vent positions as relevant, or you're not building an aperiodic box or aiming for a 'virtual volume increase' per Nousiane above.

SAE-F10 soft wool felt in my experience has roughly equivalent behaviour to OC-703 for a given thickness, albeit at a price. Ultratouch recycled denim, again in equivalent thickness, wasn't far off either & has the environmentally friendly card up its sleeve, which is no bad thing in this day & age, but unfortunately the most effective variation (which I think was a Bob Reimer commission) has been NLA for many years. The other 'standard' types are still good though -you just sometimes need to double up areas depending on the load in question, which since it's quite affordable in many regions isn't going to qualify for tragedy of the month. 😉

Whisper it: 30mm BAF is more effective than often believed, although again, you sometimes need to double up (or more) the layers. Since in relative terms it costs peanuts, again, not a huge deal. I prefer the others, but it's a viable alternative & much better than nothing at all, or egg-crate foam, most of which has the damping properties of cheese.
 
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In my vented housing for the Fane 12-250TC you find Basotect...
 

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I'm a big fan of wool for use in loudspeakers. My T-lines are lined with 1/2" wool felt for the first 1/3 of the way. They are lightly stuffed with fiberglass in the upper chamber. My Econowaves are damped with 2" thick 100% fiberglass and the midrange is great from a 12" speaker. Much better than I expected. I don't like fiberfill or pillow stuffing or foam, I'm pretty sure they do mostly nothing. I've used wool blankets from Goodwill as damping too, they are inexpensive and work well but can give inconsistent results.

Some of the recycled felt may give you inconsistent results because it's made of whatever shows up at the factory. 😕

I like the felt tiles. They might be great on the walls in a studio or stuck on a woofer frame, or around a tweeter or even on the back panel of a speaker enclosure to remove resonances between the wall and high frequency diffraction. I glued some industrial floor tiles around my tweeters, it actually worked.